RFCEMW3G–Smilax regelii or Sarsaparilla or Jamaican sarsaparilla, vintage engraved illustration. Dictionary of words and things - Larive and Fleury - 1895.
RM2MEW72G–Geranium regelii
RFCW1GXW–USSR-CIRCA 1975: A stamp printed in the USSR, depicts a flower Eminium lehmannii (regelii), circa 1975
RMP6H811–Manna ash, Fraxinus ornus 1, and sarsaparilla, Smilax regelii 2, with root, flower and node. Handcoloured copperplate engraving from Friedrich Johann Bertuch's Bilderbuch fur Kinder (Picture Book for Children), Weimar, 1802.
RM2A77FEX–Manna ash, Fraxinus ornus 1, and sarsaparilla, Smilax regelii 2, with root, flower and node. Handcoloured copperplate engraving from Friedrich Johann Bertuch's Bilderbuch fur Kinder (Picture Book for Children), Weimar, 1802.
RM2DBKYW5–Wildbirne (Pyrus regelii)
RMAD37BY–Geranium regelii is a chalky blue in late April and May
RMAP250G–Jamaican Sarsaparilla (Smilax regelii Smilax officinalis) twig with leaves studio picture
RFEW9JY7–Smilax regelii or Sarsaparilla or Jamaican sarsaparilla, vintage engraved illustration. Dictionary of words and things - Larive
RM2METXAB–Tripterygium regelii
RF2X2B84N–Regel's tulip, Tulipa regelii is endemic to Kazakhstan. It is found in the Chu-Ili Mountains and the Dzungarian Alatau, usually with one, less often w
RMMNM79H–Geranium Regelii in garden border
RM2WEXW71–Alternanthera regelii as Telanthera regelii.
RFTRKNA3–Tripterygium regelii Sprague et Takeda (Regel's Threewingnut) - seeds close-up.
RFM1MX0P–Chickweed (Cerastium arcticum probably Cerastium regelii) as typical element of Arctic cold deserts to 82 degrees North latitude
RMP558EA–Sarsaparilla, Smilax regelii. Handcoloured botanical illustration drawn by G. Reid and engraved on steel by Weddell from John Stephenson and James Morss Churchill's 'Medical Botany: or Illustrations and descriptions of the medicinal plants of the London, Edinburgh, and Dublin pharmacopœias,' John Churchill, London, 1831.
RMRG1EJX–. The Canadian field-naturalist. Natural history. 83. Arenaria longipedunculata x-4iB^ v^' ^ -. x.V^ / • ^ ^ ^^^ ^K-^ "OV m^T" ^ ^^ ^^L^/' ^ V. 84. Cerastium regelii. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Ottawa Field-Naturalists' Club. Ottawa, Ottawa Field-Naturalists' Club
RFEW959P–Smilax regelii or Sarsaparilla or Jamaican sarsaparilla, vintage engraved illustration. Dictionary of words and things - Larive
RMMNM7BC–Geranium Regelii in garden border
RMRDWHB4–. The vegetation of the Siberian-Mongolian frontiers (the Sayansk region). Botany; Botany. prises Wettstein's E. Regelii, which is more widely distributed in Asia, but all of your specimens bear flowers of the larger type, whereby corresponding to E. Jaeschkei. As the latter has been described after al- pine specimens, it bears rather the cha- racter of an early summer type; your specimens no. 1140 (from islets in the river Abakan) were so far more typi- cal." According to Wettstein s de- scription, there is no other esential dif- ference between E. Regelii and E. Jaeschkei than the latte
RM2B29AAF–Wildbirne (Pyrus regelii)
RMA64A73–Sarsaparilletee Smilax ornata Tea made of leaves of Sarsaparilla
RMRHAAB1–. The Book of gardening; a handbook of horticulture. Gardening; Floriculture. 8o4 THE BOOK OF GARDENING. A. atrovirens. Small-growing sorts: A. cuspidata^ A. enstfera, A. horrida, A. filifera, A. mexicana^ A. Regelii^ A. striata^ A. albicans^ A. ferox, and A. rigida. Aloes.—The true Aloes come from the Cape of Good Hope. They differ from the Agaves chiefly in having long and rather thin stems, which, when the plants are large, re- quire support, in having brittle leaves without fibre, and in flowering freely without dying immedi- ately afterwards. They are handsome subjects, and the flowers of
RM2B27CT6–Wildbirne (Pyrus regelii)
RMRDXEDF–. The Book of gardening; a handbook of horticulture. Gardening; Horticulture. 8o4 THE BOOK OF GARDENING. A. atrovireris. Small-growing sorts: A. cuspidata, A. ensifera, A. horrida, A. filifera, A. mexicana, A. Regelii, A. striata, A. albicans, A. ferox, and A. rigida. Aloes.—The true Aloes come from the Cape of Good Hope. They differ from the Agaves chiefly in having long and rather thin stems, which, when the plants are large, re- quire support, in having brittle leaves without fibre, and in flowering freely without dying immedi- ately afterwards. They are handsome subjects, and the flowers o